Europe's
big guns warn Greek voters that a no vote means euro exit
Germany,
France and Italy joined the European commission in insisting that
Sunday’s poll is about continued eurozone membership
Larry Elliott,
Graeme Wearden, Nicholas Watt and Helena Smith in Athens
Tuesday 30 June 2015
00.00 BST /
http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/jun/29/greek-crisis-referendum-eurozone-vote-germany-france-italy
The eurozone’s
three biggest countries have raised the stakes in next Sunday’s
Greek referendum with an orchestrated warning to voters that a no
vote would mean exit from the single currency and the return of the
drachma.
As the Greek economy
suffered on its first day of stringent capital controls, politicians
from Germany, France and Italy joined the European commission in
insisting that the poll was not about whether Athens could secure
more favourable bailout terms but was about continued euro
membership.
The stark assessment
was shared by George Osborne who told MPs that the UK economy would
be affected by the chaos that would result from Greece leaving the
eurozone.
The chancellor’s
comments came as ratings agency Standard & Poor’s issued a grim
analysis of the repercussions that could follow an euro exit, the
chances of which it has raised from 33% to 50%. S&P said there
could be “a serious foreign currency shortage for the private and
public sectors, potentially leading to the rationing of key imports
such as fuel”.
S&P added that
without continuing European Central Bank support for Greek banks, the
country’s “payment system would shut down and its banks would not
be able to operate”.
Eurozone leaders
sought to exploit pictures of cashpoint queues and empty Athens
restaurants to stress what was at stake if Greeks supported the
decision of their prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, to reject the fresh
austerity measures being demanded by the country’s creditors for
continued financial support.
At the end of a day
that saw sharp falls in share prices around the globe, Tsipras used a
TV address to ask a public still stunned by the imposition of a €60
daily limit on bank withdrawals to back his resistance to a new round
of tough tax increases and spending cuts demanded by the troika of
the commission, the ECB and the International Monetary Fund.
Tsipras urged Greeks
to vote no in the forthcoming referendum, saying the plebiscite would
be a strong “negotiating tool” in talks with lenders. Denying
that Greece had walked away from negotiations, he told state-run TV:
“The greater the number of no [votes], the greater the weapon the
government will have to relaunch negotiations. Greece never left the
negotiating table, it is still at the negotiating table. ”
Appearing by turns
combative and nervous, the 40-year-old leader suggested, for the
first time, that he and his radical left Syriza party would resign if
the yes vote triumphed in the referendum.
“We will respect
the result but we will not be there to serve it,” he told the
station.
Greece’s
international creditors clearly did not want a no vote because they
wanted to kill “the hope” of enacting policies against austerity,
he claimed. “They want to kill democracy in the place where it was
born,” he said, adding that the “negative decision” to close
banks was aimed squarely at thwarting Sunday’s vote.
“Greek people have
experienced more difficult moments and they will survive,’ he said.
With polls showing
Greeks in favour of remaining inside the eurozone, the Greek
government made no mention of exit from the single currency in the
wording of Sunday’s referendum. This will ask Greece whether they
support the “plan of agreement” drawn up by the troika and will
put the no option Tsipras wants at the top of the ballot paper.
The publication of
the wording coincided with Greece admitting that it would not meet
the Tuesday deadline for making a €1.6bn (£1.1bn) payment to the
IMF in Washington and new evidence of the parlous state of Greek
banks following the referendum announcement. It emerged that the Bank
of Greece asked in vain for the ECB to increase its emergency funding
by €6bn in order to cover panic withdrawals.
Sigmar Gabriel,
Germany’s vice-chancellor, voiced concerns that a so-called Grexit
could start to unravel six decades of closer integration. He said the
crisis was the most serious faced by Europe since the signing of the
Treaty of Rome in 1957. He added that if the Greeks voted no on
Sunday, they were voting “against remaining in the euro”.
He was supported by
French president François Hollande, who came under strong pressure
from US president Barack Obama to find a solution to the deepening
crisis before it caused more damage to a still-fragile global
economy. Hollande said: “It’s the Greek people’s right to say
what they want their future to be. It’s about whether the Greeks
want to stay in the eurozone or take the risk of leaving.”
Jeroen Dijsselbloem,
the chairman of the Eurogroup of finance ministers from the 19
nations using the single currency, said the door was still open for
negotiations to resume despite time running out before Sunday’s
referendum.
But the hardening
stance among Greece’s partners was evident from a tweet by Matteo
Renzi, Italy’s prime minister and hitherto seen as one of the
European leaders closest to Tsipras. The referendum, Renzi said, was
not a question of the commission versus Tsipras but of “the euro
versus the drachma. This is the choice”.
Jean-Claude Juncker,
the commission president, said: “It’s the moment of truth ... I’d
like to ask the Greek people to vote yes ... No would mean that
Greece is saying no to Europe.”
In a sign of how
relations have been soured by last week’s rejection of what was
seen by Tsipras as a take-it-or-leave-it final offer, Juncker accused
the Greek prime minister of telling lies about the proposals and said
they did not include plans to cut pensions. A government spokesman in
Athens accused Juncker of telling a “preposterous lie”.
Greece’s stock
market was closed but a share price fall that began in Asia spread to
Europe and later the US. London’s FTSE 100 lost almost 2% of its
value, with drops of 3.5% in Frankfurt and 3.7% in Paris. New York’s
Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 2%, the biggest one day decline
this year, while the Nasdaq tumbled 2.4%. The euro slid to its
weakest level against the pound since 2007 and now stands at almost
€1.40 to the pound. Twelve months ago it was trading at €1.25.
On global markets,
the interest rate on Greek 10-year bonds rose by four percentage
points to 15%, a sign that financial markets fear the country’s
days in the euro are numbered. About 850 Greek banks could open for
business on Thursday in order to pay pensions, the government said.
Osborne said British
holidaymakers travelling to Greece should carry enough cash for the
whole trip and to cover emergencies. After the chancellor held a
contingency meeting with David Cameron and the governor of the Bank
of England, Mark Carney, he said he was “hoping for the best but
preparing for the worst”.
The chancellor said
British taxpayers could be liable for hundreds of millions of pounds
if Greece fell out of the eurozone and relied on an emergency loan
scheme supported by the EU’s budget which is funded by all 28
member states.
He said that an
early decision by the coalition government was to exempt the UK from
eurozone bailouts, dramatically reducing the “direct exposure” of
the UK. But Osborne added: “Of course we are part of the financial
system of Europe and we will be affected if there is a Greek exit.”
The chancellor’s
remarks referred to the EU’s balance of payments support system
which is open to non-eurozone members of the EU. The scheme has been
used in recent years to release billions of euros to Romania, Hungary
and Latvia when they were hit by the global financial crash.
If Greek falls out
of the euro, it is expected that the IMF would become its main lender
of emergency. Under the arrangements for Hungarian and Romanian, the
EU balance of payments scheme provided about 40% of their loans.
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